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・ John Neilson (footballer)
・ John Neilson Gladstone
・ John Neilson Lake
・ John Nelder
・ John Nelson
・ John Nelson (baseball)
・ John Nelson (British Army officer)
・ John Nelson (conductor)
・ John Nelson (convert)
・ John Nelson (cricketer)
・ John Nelson (lawyer)
・ John Nelson (martyr)
・ John Nelson (merchant)
・ John Nelson (physician)
・ John Nelson (police officer)
John Nelson (soccer)
・ John Nelson (swimmer)
・ John Nelson (visual effects artist)
・ John Nelson Battenberg
・ John Nelson Carlisle
・ John Nelson Cooper
・ John Nelson Darby
・ John Nelson Goulty
・ John Nelson Hinkle
・ John Nelson House
・ John Nelson Hyde
・ John Nelson Partridge
・ John Nemechek
・ John Nephew
・ John Nepomuk Tschupick


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John Nelson (soccer) : ウィキペディア英語版
John Nelson (soccer)

Johnny Nelson (1905 in Johnstone, Scotland – November 30, 1984 in Yonkers, New York) was a Scottish American soccer center forward who ended his career as the second leading scorer in the history of the first American Soccer League. He was posthumously inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 2005.
==Professional career==
At some point as a teenager, Nelson joined the semi-professional Yonkers Thistle of the New York State League. In the spring of 1924, he signed with the Brooklyn Wanderers of the American Soccer League. He played only four games, scoring one goal. While these numbers give little indication of his goal scoring prowess, his first full season in the league showed his full worth. He stormed to fifth place on the goals table with twenty-four in thirty-three games.〔(U.S. Soccer Archives – 1925 )〕 Before Brooklyn traded him to the Fall River Marksmen for George Graham in March 1928, he scored 101 goals for the team. Nelson played only eleven games at the end of the 1927-1928 season and another three at the start of the 1928-1929 season in Fall River before he jumped to J&P Coats for twelve games. He then moved to the New York Nationals for the end of the season. On May 18, 1929, Nelson scored two goals for the Nationals in a 2-2 tie with the Providence Clam Diggers in the final of the 1929 American Cup. The Nationals won the rematch two days later. Nelson remained with the Nationals, renamed the New York Giants in 1930, until an April 5, 1931 knee injury ended his career.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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